All Apple Iwork 2014--2017 |link| -
During this window, Apple shifted its software strategy from selling standalone "iWork '09" packages to offering a unified, cross-platform experience.
In late 2013, Apple released a major overhaul, rewriting the entire suite to share a common code base across iOS and OS X (now macOS). By 2014, the dust had settled, and Apple began refining this unified vision. The overarching goal was clear: create a seamless experience where a document created on an iPhone looked and behaved exactly the same on a MacBook Pro. All Apple iWork 2014--2017
Apple introduced – a feature allowing anyone to watch a presenter’s slideshow on any device via a web link, without needing iCloud or an Apple ID. This was a silent killer feature for remote teams. During this window, Apple shifted its software strategy
This era introduced the ability to start a document on an iPhone and instantly pick up where you left off on a Mac. The overarching goal was clear: create a seamless
When Apple released the first versions of iWork (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote) in 2005, they were charming, Mac-only productivity suites with a focus on stunning design. But the period between was arguably the most turbulent, transformative, and crucial era in the suite’s history.